TV Article THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL By Marc Bernardin Marc Bernardin Marc Bernardin is a former senior editor at Entertainment Weekly. He left EW in 2009. EW's editorial guidelines Published on April 11, 2003 04:00AM EDT It’s the scariest movie I’ve seen in a long while, and not simply because of the story — a knowing, mature sci-fi morality play about a spaceman who comes to Earth with a grave warning about our future. No, Robert Wise’s film is frightening because its themes so eerily mirror our war with Iraq. Fearful that our aggression as a species will escalate beyond our terrestrial borders, alien emissary Klaatu (Rennie) scolds the world’s assembled minds with words that could be from President Bush’s State of the Union address: ”There must be security for all, or no one is secure.” In the film’s rather brave ending, humanity is left with a sobering set of options: annihilation or peace guaranteed by the presence of superior, undeniable force. Today’s sci-fi filmmakers could learn a thing or two from an old black-and-white gem that has the here and now written all over it. More Sci-Fi Movies